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Page 20 text:
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- a-,....Q--21,-??i':.i:'f2'ir: .'f1,,,,,,,.,.-i,--5 4-Qilii ri. 1 f1?l7' ' A A ' 7 ' 1 ' -. -vi' f-H--'z 'aI-.'s ,L . :gdiS.Baa.....,....,-+---'- -,N -. .4,,, ,, ...x-.---'ws-fm.'.-i.ui2 - -++- f- I x '-'1 msn. ,gilucfenlf Mzfced Across My Window Pane The wind comes rushing post my window pone With rumblings stolen from the seo, Noture listens, Bowed in deep humility- Then worships Reverently. A sunset flashes on my window pone More glory thon the world con see, Noture pouses . ln o whispered reverie, And gozes Silently. A stor-beom donces on my window pone Like o silver dew upon the lown, Noture sleeps, Wropped in dusky block chiffon, Nor stirs Until the down. Betty C. Shepherd. Winter Crystals My winter tree is strung with crystol beods Thot glisten in the sun, The stronds breok one by one, And clotter down to eorth like wind-blown seeds. Froil limbs encosed in crystol gleom with light, A thousond shuttles poce To weove o gem-set loce, While myriod fires tlosh from the focets bright. With shining silver ribbons, twigs ore bound. . . Lo, diomond beouty wokesl A crystol gorlond breoks In iridescent bits upon the ground. Moy Liddel. ,X oli' thc Sep I 9- be1 ho Be ine gil LL, M wc th -1 A ielqzni' .f : .2Z'QC'LC'..f 'A - vigil ' ' ' ' N 'l ': N NP ' K , -.,
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Page 19 text:
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,. , ,, - . -,-.A --1 -3-A ?.- p ,, , ,V - u. 'X - N 'L ,h . H 4, ,,, , . ,.. -,,,-..,-,..-,- - . V -c- . .-,-.- -.-L.,,-.-., . , . I .,,.:n.-,qv-. . ,., . R.. I I ,.,4c.u'u . . Y.. ..-. -, ..,.1 -. J... .v - .4-:'wB7 .,,.f,1!ZZ'TS, !'Z.s-sexi.. - WN A -X , lllege T. C. GTC. t the illy a f ride lrrnal it by ri the wings utfit, e Ply- ide a dress :nted girls tyll anerl , and r the men :e to their Kay until asses. ro his venth t one 'noon r has most y. ta ke cgilwalenf Zac ing Kansas City Teachers College has one of the most successful placement records of any Teachers College in our country. This is a result of thorough preparation accomplished through observation, participation, and actual teaching in the elementary classroom under the careful guidance and direction of capable classroom and college supervisors. Upon graduation the student has had about four hundred clock hours of supervised teaching and experience in at least three grades. In the junior year the student is gradually introduced to actual teaching by planning and teaching single lessons, by developing a unit, and finally by teaching two days a week for the last ten weeks of the school year. The senior student devotes four days a week for ten weeks to supervised teaching and has opportunities for experi- ences in substitution. Valuable use is made of the conference periods at the close of each day with the classroom supervisor and with the college supervisors after their visits. At this time constructive criti- cism is given in a friendly and helpful manner. The followng are the senior teaching assignments and their classroom supervisors for the fall term of l94O. HALE H. COOK SCHOOL Dorothy Phillips and Lillian Davis, Kindergarten, Miss, Louise Hornbrook, Jacquelin Gustaveson and Sarah Hillebrandt, fifth grade, Miss Elsie Schaeffer. WILLIAM A. KNOTTS SCHOOL Geraldine Michaux and Lillian Lukenbill, second grade, Miss Elinor Whitney. BRYANT SCHOOL Jean Lane and Marjorie Rowe, fifth grade, Miss Beatrice Brown. SEVEN OAKS and MESERVEY SCHOOLS Irma May Walton, sixth grade, Miss Ruth Lowrey. BENJAMIN HARRISON SCHOOL Louise Simons and Frank Orndorff, sixth grade, Miss Helen Amos. HORACE MANN SCHOOL Lenore Christy and Alice Harville, seventh grade, Miss Alice Old. WOODLAND SCHOOL I Georgia King, kindergarten, Miss Nellie Storms, Frances Newton and Betty Shepherd, first grade, Miss Louise Zimmer, Dorothy Gregory and Gloria Roach, first grade, Miss Bess McCrudden, Marietta Hall and Ruth Thomas, second grade, Miss Wilma Robinson, Margery Hall and Abigail Elliott, third grade, Miss Priscilla Rogan, George Davis and Virginia Schmidt, fourth grade, Miss Virginia Lochman, Jacob Raizen and Paul Fraccascia, fifth grade, Miss Bee O'Hearn, Beverly Davis, sixth grade, Miss Lenore Peery, Roxie Gardner, seventh grade, Miss May Lambader.
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Page 21 text:
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T ' s'-' -- ' ' ' , T: f' '. Lg,lg:-1 --- s. Z.f.- - - ,i,, . Q - -' ' Q-f-if-,4 -. . ,f ,I 'assi' nausea-'rr ' ' V +-- -T anal, '?.4i4ki.A?,, ,, y. -. u. -. 67' JK- ,.,g, g ., .4..i- ...ru I 5 .xgfnmni The Alumni Associotion of Teochers College ottempts to keep olive the troditions of our college ond to join together into one body those students who hove been groduoted from Teochers College. ln September, the Alumni Associotion elected its officers for the yeor l94O-l94l. Miss Morion Brewster wos elected president, Miss Elizo- beth Morris, Vice President, Miss Dorothy Zimmer, Secretory, Miss Hortense Scholler, Treosurer. The following Teochers Col- lege Alumni hove recently been oppointed to positions in the city schools: Mcirjorie Forrell, Williom Dierks, Alice Hoeltgen, Mory Meehon, Anno Belle Moorhouse, Dorotheo Ozor, Peggy Poyne, Ruth Roberts, Jonet Lee Stoltz ond Eulo Voirol. Jomes F. Red- mond, who wos groduoted from Teochers College in l935 with o ninety hour diplomo ond who re- ceived his B.S. degree in l938, hos been oppointed to the position' of Assistont to the Superintendent. Before his oppointment he tought ot the E. C. White school. Jomes F. Redmond Recent groduotes to obtoin teoching positions outside the city include: Beuloh Bornthouse, Morie Boekhouse, Dorothy Clork, Vir- ginio Cole, Pouline Dohn, Cornelio Fensler, Bernito Keith, Dorothy Lucos, Lourelle O'L'eory, Morthojone Rhocides ond Dorothy Sylvester. Those obtoining clerkships in the city were: Virginio Detjen, Mory Lucille Hodges, Rose Evelyn Kurs, ond Evelyn Miller. Teochers College is indeed proud of its olumni, those men ond women who ore meeting the chollenge ond the greot opportunities thot the teoching profession offords in our democrocy.
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